Tessa Shepperson is a specialist landlord & tenant lawyer. Between 1994 and 2013 she ran her own solicitors practice, TJ Shepperson.

However this was then closed to allow her to concentrate on her online Landlord Law service, her training company Easy Law Training and her writing. For example, Tessa also writes the popular Landlord Law Blog at www.landlordlawblog.co.uk. She lives in Norfolk with her husband and one son.

Tessa Shepperson, Legal Author, Trainer, and Landlord Law Expert

Tessa Shepperson's Blog Posts

Tessa Shepperson is a specialist landlord & tenant lawyer. Between 1994 and 2013 she ran her own solicitors practice, TJ Shepperson. However this was then closed to allow her to concentrate on her online Landlord Law service, her training company Easy Law Training and her writing. For example, Tessa also writes the popular Landlord Law Blog at www.landlordlawblog.co.uk. She lives in Norfolk with her husband and one son.

One of the main reasons why landlords have their eviction proceedings chucked out of court is errors in the notice. Sometimes the errors seem minor and landlords are amazed that something so small can cost them their claim.

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A few reasons why 1000's of landlords use us for Tenancy Agreements

Its Quicker and Easier to do it yourself! Rather than paying between £90 and £200 to a letting agent or a solicitor you can do it yourself (meaning fill in the form) straight away with complete peace of mind knowing full well that they have been prepared by an expert lawyer and there is a money back guarantee if you change your mind later Continue

A few other bestsellers below:

Section 21 Notice Requiring Possession - Our solicitor prepared Section 21 Notice is used to end a residential Assured Shorthold Tenancy either before or after the initial fixed term has ended. This is a mandatory document for any landlord wishing to regain possession. Continue

Section 8 Notice to Quit This is the legal notice you need when a tenant has failed to pay rent on time or in full and you either want them to leave your property immediately or give a final legal warning that eviction will be the next step if they do not pay you.Continue